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tv   Shepard Smith Reporting  FOX News  July 22, 2019 12:00pm-1:00pm PDT

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family. >> julie: that brings you chills. the couple encourages others to become organ donors because you never know who's life you can save. thank you for joining us, i'll be back here tomorrow and the rest of the week. here shepard smith. >> shepard: breaking news on fox news channel. corkery puerto rico's governor s interview, protest across the island and beyond. he will join us live ahead. i am shepard smith. that scandal prompting ten straight days of demonstrations on the u.s. territory and today's protest could be the largest in puerto rico's history. organizers say they expect nearly 1 million people to show up and if so that is about one-third of the island's total population. protesters already close the biggest mall and shut down a main highway. they say they will not quit until the governor does.
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the territorial governor is refusing to resign after a leaked text messages, hundreds of pages show his associates and him making fun of gay people, people love disabilities and the victims from the hurricane. some examples. governor ricardo rosselló called a female politician a whore. he said he was elevating to shoot a political critic and he responded that you would be doing me a great favor. the same ceo made fun of ricky martin and his sexuality and joked about the bodies piling up after the hurricane. on top of that some of the administration officials face charges to visits in which they had financial ties, millions of dollars. president trump weighed in on all of this calling puerto rico's leadership corrupt and incompetent. last night it a new move the
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governor said he would not seek reelection. that was new but he maintained he also will not step down. critics say that only added fuel to the fire for those seeking to drive him from office and that anger is evident today on the streets of puerto rico. the governor will join us live moments from now. bryan llenas reporting live on a wet day in san juan. brian? >> that is right. torrential downpour for more than an hour, but you can see the protesters have stayed. they die hard ones i've stayed to listen to the message. this was the tenth day of protest and you look at this video, tens of thousands if not hundreds estimated to show up. they shut down the expressway, the main artery of puerto rico. he has always been a chant here and you mentioned those text messages, thousand 900 pages of
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group messages. people say those messages only validated what they have felt. hundreds of thousands of people with blue tarps on their homes that have suffered from the hurricane. people who have gone pensions caught, schools closed and now they're dealing with this. essentially they feel as though they text messages have validated their frustrations with their government. they feel ricardo rosselló is corrupt and has mismanaged millions of dollars. ricky martin was also here. he was messaged in those messages. homophobic slurs messaged about him. he has been on the front lines. he was here with other singers from puerto rico. we have spoken to a bunch of puerto ricans and mentee of them reference the message. he decided that he will not seek reelection next year and that he will resign as president of his party. for many people that was a slap in the face. take a listen. >> it was an insult.
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we know that. it was an insult of our intelligence. we do need to hear that. we needed to hear, i am out. >> attitude. he could get away with everything and anything and he can do whatever the hell he wants. basically trying to make fools out of puerto ricans. >> people here are just frustrated and ten days of protests and we have seen pots and pans being banged, jet skis outside of the governor's mansion, they have found every creative and peaceful way to protest. 99% of the protests have been peaceful and on wednesday there was tear gas, that was thrown at protesters, the only time we saw an incident and frankly people are telling us that if he doesn't resign that things could get worse and that's the fear. >> shepard: brian ganis.
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for his first one-on-one interview. the governor of puerto rico, ricardo rosselló is with us live. governor, thank you. >> thank you for the opportunity. >> shepard: a representative in congress, they have called for you to resign. the largest newspaper has said it's time for you to listen to the people and step down now. here's what the president of united states at about your government today. >> the congress of united states handed them $92 billion and that $92 billion is in the hands of incompetent people and corrupt people. the governor has done a terrible job. >> shepard: it's not $92 billion, but the point is made and people are on the street sang get out. why won't you? >> thank you again for the opportunity. i have seen the protest and i have heard the people talk.
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i've had a process of introspection. i've made a decision. i'm not going to seek reelection. that way i can focus on the job at hand. the biggest recovery effort in the modern history of united states on our hands, we are battling corruption and there are certain initiatives we have already started and new ones we want to put out there so that we can fix the problem. just today i signed a new law that guarantees that decades of mismanagement that have gone and puerto rico without the appropriate foresight about purchasing a procurement agreement now will be singled to processes -- >> shepard: my question, there are hundreds of thousands of protesters on the street, the president, they are all saying you need to go and you said no. why not? >> there is an important
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component about rule of law and i respect that process. we will have and we will propose certain mechanisms so that within the future that process can go forward. i need to work beyond politics so that we can address some of the long-standing problems of corruption here in puerto rico and fix that problem. i have a proposal that i sent to several of the aids of the president that we have been working on. five a record of what we have done and things we want to do moving forward. >> shepard: excuse the interruption. the corruption is rampant and puerto rico. economically a fiscal crisis, $70 billion in debt and a 13 year recession. 900 pages of profanity laced messages. he made light of the casualties of the hurricane, you tossed
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homophobic and misogynistic remarks. you were calling the former speaker a [bleep], you said go leap yourself and when he said he is salivating to shoot the woman he was said you'd be doing me a grand favor. attacks on woman, gays, dead relatives on your own island and after that who who is left to support you? is it even say for you to gover govern? >> i've apologized. i am making amends for all those efforts. >> shepard: you've apologized for what? >> for all of the comments i made on the chat. that is one thing. there is another effort that needs to move forward which is the battling of corruption. we have implemented -- >> shepard: the corruption was
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in your own administration. the five people in the chat, you got rid of all of them but you remain. does not stop with you? >> i was elected by the people love puerto rico. >> shepard: and those people around the streets saying we want you out. that's a headline the politicians on both sides of the aisle on your owned i'll understand the same thing. you are a man on your island by yourself, how long can you stay there? >> my effort and commitment is to follow through on some of the efforts that i established for the people of puerto rico and that includes establishing a plan i have already circulated with members within the white house so that we can battle this corruption and tackle what government employees are doing and the collaboration with the government. this is the biggest recovery effort and united states history.
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it's important to state that we have the biggest step program and the united states. they came over here and they established that nothing went wrong. there are a lot of efforts we have been doing. if you want to drain the swamp you need to tackle those problems. >> shepard: who has come forward to support you? >> there are folks who have come forward. >> shepard: specifically? can you give me one name? just one name. >> i've talked to people from different groups. people from administrations. >> shepard: you are not able to give me one name? is that correct? >> i can. the mayor supported this effort. >> shepard: his name?
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>> there are other folks who have established people in the legislator and people and they said that have supported me. they have supported the fact that i will not run and i shouldn't seek reelection but they have established it's important to follow the rule of law. their support. i understand the visuals you are seeing, i have heard of that. >> shepard: what have you heard from the demonstrators on your street? give me examples on what you've heard heard today. >> we have heard there is obviously disappointment. >> shepard: i haven't heard of that. i've heard puerto rican after puerto rican watching multiple satellite feeds and speaking with are people who are in puerto rico and listening to journalists, i have not heard the word disappointments. i've heard the word -- numerous puerto ricans saying you've disrespected them and not lead them properly, you made fun of
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them, made light of them. they no longer trust and your leadership. you had 660,000 votes to be governor, by all estimates there are more people on the streets right now demanding you step down. >> i'm not making light of the demonstrations. i am establishing -- we have established what we want to do on the efforts that are ongoing and what we need in order to fix this problem. there is a problem. we started to fix it and now we have presented a plan. i want to make sure that we collaborate with the government, particularly with some of the federal resources. i've established and i challenge that we can get a federal fund over here in puerto rico and all the agencies so that these funds can keep moving. these are the proposals we have in tom mack and my objective is that we can established
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these allegations. >> shepard: the sound reasonable. you are eliminating the past few weeks and the last ten days of demonstrations and the widespread calls and all that you have said, you said i apologized for my mistakes. that is how you have called them repeatedly. that's what you call them at a news conference. mistakes are things you do, that you didn't mean to do or that you did by accident or an error and then you go back and you correct them. 900 pages of attacks on people of your old islands are arguably not mistakes, they are a pattern and when you look at that pattern if that were some other politician other than you, what would you say about that person? would you want that person leading you after all you said? >> i would want to showcase my records. i would showcase my actions.
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the efforts we have made in puerto rico. the challenges that are starting on a recovery effort, a restructuring effort with a fiscal oversight board. the reduce of the cost of the expenditures and government bent because puerto rico was in a fiscal crunch and since we started in the administration we have made strides on the economy and elsewhere, but mostly we have made policy changes that are significant for women, lgbtq, other sectors that are recognized as some of the most -- the biggest steps in those efforts. again, i use words that i've apologized for. i have also taken significant actions in the direction of helping vulnerable sectors in our population. >> shepard: have you
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appropriately apologized? have you apologized to ricky martin? the survivors of the people who died in your storm? have you asked for forgiveness? the looks of your street that would suggest a people don't believe you've had. ten days in a row. have you apologized sufficiently? what will end these demonstrations as long as you were still in office? >> i have apologized. my effort is to apologize. >> shepard: you can do that here. you are welcome to do that here. >> i apologize. to ricky martin, -- >> shepard: what about the survivors of the dead people who are made light of? >> of course. that as well. i apologize for all the things.
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>> shepard: why did you say those things? what was that inspired you to say those things in such a cavalier, dismissive way? it wasn't a day, a week, it was two months, 900 pages in december and january of that language from the governor by the way about his own people. >> some of that language is not mine, some of it was discussed. >> shepard: that is true. i want to clarify that and i apologize. it was someone else who said i would like to shoot the female mayor of san juan and you said, you would be doing a great favo favor. >> again, everything that was said i assume responsibility for her. i apologize for it. i want to establish that i am in a position to apologize to
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everybody and to make an effort for reconciliation and my focus is to make sure the policy that we have enacted moves forward. >> shepard: those of us who live back here stateside have watched the horrors that have ravished your islands and many of us, i know i have, we have looked and have wept for your people. to see all that your people have gone through the difficulty in getting everything fixed. the months and months without power and water and the devastation of the tourism economy. seeing all that really made us very sad and wanting to help in some way. i know a lot of people here have donated. do you love puerto rico? >> i do love puerto rico. >> shepard: if you love puerto rico and you look out in the streets and you see the
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hundreds of thousands of people -- excuse me. if you see hundreds of thousands of people who also love puerto rico and have looked at the governor's office and said that as a man who can no longer lead us. that is what they are saying. they are saying the way for us to move on is to start fresh. we need new representation and we want the governor to resign and they have protested for ten straight days. the largest demonstration potentially in the history of the island and you stand with the firm resolve and talk about accomplishments. do you hear them? do you hear them and care what they are saying today? is the cavalier attitude from the text messages living in the background today? i ask not for myself, but the people who were on a hot, wet day on that island saying we want him gone. >> i hear them. it's part of my introspection
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and i will continue to hear them. i will continue to make my decisions and work with the people of puerto rico. it's an island that i love. the people i love. i left every ounce of heart, everything i have done so that we can recover properly. i was here during that process when there was no food and access to water and no roads. working as hard as i could with a lot of people so that we could get those emergency aid to the people of puerto rico. >> shepard: what about the corruption? why did all that money go to politically connected people? why are thousands and thousands and thousands of people long after this hurricane still sitting with blue tarps are not able to live their lives? some of these people don't have the necessities of life and you have billions of billions of dollars. the people of puerto rico are
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asking tough questions and most of them say in your newspapers and our cameras that the text messages are not the reason, the final straw. they believe your administration has been corrupt and cavalier about their own existence and they want you to leave and you are refusing to do so. what makes you think these protesters will stop and are you afraid you may not be safe? >> again, what i want to do is continue the conversation. >> shepard: you refused to meet with the people who are protesting outside. they have bagged to meet with you in my understanding, you have said no. you have not done a one-on-one interview with anyone and puerto rico. just a news conference. >> i've had two news conferences and i haven't rejected a conversation with anybody.
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i am committed to having that conversation and establishing the path forward through dialogue and working on the initiatives but listen, the blue tarp situation is where we need those federal resources. i'm challenging as part of our effects that we can get a federal fund, connections from the different agencies, the local agencies so that those funds can be administered properly. in terms of the corruption, as has been a long-standing issue and we need to fix the system. it was a system that responded to people and now we want a system that responds to itself and that is why we made procurement and created the office of the inspector general. we created that office early in 2017, we couldn't implemented immediately after the storm and now it's starting to gain. that is why probably there was difficulty in identifying some of these elements of corruption,
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but from my perception i can battle corruption and that will be the focus from the remaining of my administration. >> shepard: governor ricardo rosselló of puerto rico, the best of the people of puerto rico. the news continues. ♪ (vo) the ant mindlessly marches on.
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>> shepard: 26 minutes past the hour. president trump lashing out at democrats and criticizing robert mueller. he testimony is set for this week, wednesday specifically. the president said he would probably not watch that and then said i will watch a little of i it. john roberts will likely watch all of it and he is with us. >> with think a lot of the country will be watching and the president may be included. he has an out-of-town event but it's not until later in the day
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and it's fairly close so you'll be able to watch. the president sitting in the oval office as was meeting with the prime minister, imran khan, insisting he will not set their clue to the screen. >> i will not be watching mueller because you can't take all those bites out of the apple. we had no collusion, no obstruction, we had no nothing. we had a total no collusion finding. the democrats were devastated. they went crazy. they went off the deep end. >> he said there was no collusion and no obstruction, jerry nadler who is the chairman of the committee in front of which mueller will be testifying said the president, the attorney general and other people had been lying about the findings of the report. here he is with chris wallace. >> they said they found no collusion.
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no obstruction. it exonerated the president and all three of those statements are absolute allies. a great deal of collusion, obstruction of justice and it found refusal to exonerate. >> he did say definitely that he found no evidence that they were working in collaboration with russia to throw the 2016 election. he also today going back to the conflict well and seeing how conflicted mueller was. listen here. >> there is a lot of conflicts including the fact that his best friend is comey, but he has conflicts with me. he has big complex with me. he wanted the job of the fbi director and he didn't get it and we had a business relationship where i said no. i would say that he wasn't happy and then all the sudden he gets this position. i respect him for it. he still ruled no collusion, no
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obstruction. >> the president said he has respect for democrats who voted against al green's motion to impeach the president and he said last week that as far as he is concerned that boat pretty much sealed the deal in terms of impeachment, but let's see what happens after he testifies for some five hours. some people make him may come a different idea. >> shepard: fox news will have live coverage in the entirety, bret baier and martha maccallum will anchor coverage, analysis and that is wednesday. we will start at 8:00 a.m. eastern time, less coverage throughout. a mystery in canada. people killed, families demanding answers. next, police investigating a possible connection.
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a counter intelligent official in the rawness as the country has rounded up more than a dozen cia spies. people spying for the united states inside iran and the iranians say they got him. u.s. officials say it's another lie from a country's leader as continue to rise. it's the bottom of the wear. the top of the news is next ♪ not just 80 percent like other loans. and that can mean a lot more money for you and your family. with our military service, veterans like us have earned a valuable va benefit. the right to apply for a va home loan. the newday va loan lets you refinance your mortgages, consolidate your credit card debt, put cash in the bank, and lower your payments over 600 dollars a month. newday usa has been granted automatic authority by the va. they can close your loan in as little as 30 days.
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>> shepard: missing teenagers, a burned truck, and murdered couple and a dead man. all of this around remote structures in british columbia. officials are telling the public to remain vigilant after police say they found the missing team's pickup truck on fire last friday. less than 2 miles they discovered a man's body. cops say the body is not one of the teens, they haven't released any other details.
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all of this just days after investigators say an american woman and her boyfriend were murdered while on a road trip through northern british columbia. in a area called the highway of tears, 12 miles from a popular tourist spot, the hot springs. the mother and brother of the 24-year-old told fox news that her family is in the dark about even what is happening with the investigation. >> i didn't know that her companion was with her or not until i was able to speak to the police and they said they were both deceased. >> shepard: they said they can't have an open casket at her funeral because of how brutally she was killed. the latest updates come alive with the investigation. >> at this point of the lord to there is no evidence to suggest the link
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between the missing teens, they dead man and the murdered couple and another although both investigations are unfolding in northern british columbia. this has a vast region and the distance takes six hours to drive. >> i know there are some indications from media that they may be related to other crimes, we are talking about completely different geographical areas. there is nothing to link those two. >> a week ago the mountain police found the bodies in a blue minivan along british columbia highway 97 known as alaska highway 12 miles south of the hot springs, the rcmp has posted electric billboards asking the public to provide any dashcam video they may have recorded in the area on july 14th or 15th. >> shepard: australian officials have gotten involved
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now. why australian officials? >> they are loosely involved because one of those two victims, lucas is the son of an australian police officer. a lead investigator with the south wales police force. they have sent detectives to british columbia but they say those detectives are simply there to serve as liaisons. they have full confidence in the rcmp which is leading the investigation. this after all is a canadian investigation, but at this point they say it remains unclear whether this was a crime of convenience in other words the couple broke down and someone took advantage of him or whether they were targeted. >> shepard: jonathan serrie, thank you. a live look, capitol hill. senators considering the pentagon, the acting defense secretary, the senate is expected to give him the full
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title. kids that are the challenges that he faces from china among nuclear north korea and from an increasingly desperate iran. our chief congressional correspondent mike emanuel reporting on capitol hill. a lot of work. >> a dangerous world and you've got mark esper with a lot of experience so that is one reason why we expect him to scale through confirmation. a west point graduate, he go for veteran with an aide to the former senate majority leader, a top lobbyist and is serving as army secretary. he was confirmed with a 89-6 vote in november. last week he spoke here on capitol hill about the needs for the u.s. to step up in a dangerous world. >> the growing threats posed by competitors such as china and russia warned a refocus to high intensity conflict across all of the military services. this requires us to modernize
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our forces and capitalize on rapid technological advancements, artificial intelligence, robotics, energy and hypersonic spirit >> another reason it could be a big bipartisan vote is because there is a lot of concern about being at the top of the pentagon hierarchy with tension with the wrong end military action syria. there is some opposition obviously, senate -- senator elizabeth warren saying she has concerns about his time as a top lobbyist, a significant defense contractor. >> the american people deserve to know that you are making decisions in our country, security interest not in your own financial interests. you can't make those commitments to this committee that means you should not be confirmed as secretary of defense. >> a procedural vote is expected in two hours, the final vote
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lunchtime tomorrow. >> shepard: thank you. officials in britain say that they plan to form a european led mission in the straight of hormuz after iran seized one of britain's tankers last week. the foreign secretary called it a protection mission. he told parliament that he ron committed an act of state piracy, their revolutionary guard release this video over the weekend, ski masks rappelling from helicopters to take over the tanker and we are also hearing audio recordings from before the seizure, an officer spoke to those on the ship. a british officer on a warship nearby responded warning iran that it would be against international law to block the tanker. listen. >> you will be safe. 3-6-0 degrees immediately.
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>> i will reiterate, as you are conducting transit passage come under international law your passage much not be impaired, obstructed or hampered. >> shepard: he is right about that. the ship sitting in a iranian port within iranian flag flying on board. in the meantime the iranian official says that country has broken up a cia spy ring and he ron and sentenced to death some of the accused spies. the officials say iran arrested 17 iranians collecting classified information including nuclear and military jobs. president trump tweeted that there was no truth to the claim and secretary of state mike pompeo warned people do not take the officials word. >> the regime has a long history of lying. they lied about where they shut down the navy and they have lied in the last few days about where
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they took down this tanker. it's the nature to lie to the world. i would take with a significant grain of salt any actions they have taken. >> shepard: there has been a whole lot of line. of course all those issues, adding to the rising tensions between the united states and iran. back in the 1970s a nasa intern bought tape for a couple hundred bucks, it turns out they included the first images of man walking on the moon. decades later this guy is cashing in. we will talk to him about it, next. ♪ n nutritional drink has 20 grams of protein, along with 26 essential vitamins and minerals. boost® high protein. be up for life.
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>> shepard: 19 people and costa rica have died since the beginning of last month, the beginning of june after they drink toxic alcohol. all of this is according to health officials in costa rica. now they are warning people do not drink half a dozen brands of alcohol because they tested positive for toxic levels of month and all. this has happened in different parts of the country. the ministry of health reports it's confiscated more than
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30,000 bottles. methanol poisoning can cause headaches, seizures, even put you in a coma. laura ingalls reporting live. >> the thing that is so scary is that you made not have those symptoms right away and as a death toll climbs, they are working to find if this was a manufacturing mistake or something more. 14 men and five women between the ages of 32 and 72 who have died in five different locations throughout the central american republic. several brands of alcohol were part of the 30,000 bottles of alcohol the government has confiscated. medical experts say unlike drinking alcohol which can leave you feeling sick or hung over, i drink of methanol can sneak up on you. >> you might not realize it right away. it can happen days later. the liver tries to get rid of it
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and then converts it into something that is more dangerou dangerous. unless you thought you had some other issue, you might just think you are sick, you had something wrong. >> the ministry has worn those and costa rica for the specific brands and save vendors who sell drinks could face criminal sanctions. >> shepard: we don't know at this point really if there is a connection to the tourist deaths in the dominican republic. we are not even sure there is anything to that. we know people have died. this is in no way related, right? >> we don't know. the presumption of alcohol and while the 19 who have died and costa rica happened in a variety of locations, most of the victims died in hotels and resorts. while some of the families of the dr victims wait for more details on the autopsy reports, health officials warned tourists
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everywhere, the advisory council which is part of the state department says one booze comes cheap, it could be counterfeit. >> shepard: thank you. students in oregon will not be able to take mental health days. a new law allowed for five excused absences in a three month period. students say they want to encourage kids to admit when they are struggling. supporters say it's an important step to reduce the stigma around mental health issues. moon mania, 50 years after the first trip, this chapter is from 1976 and in that year a nasa intern bought hundreds of tapes from the space program at a auction, lots of tapes, 1100 of the total cost was $217. in that batch there were three specific reels that were from the historic apollo 11 moon wal
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walk, the original recordings. the only originals. now 50 years later those three tapes old for $1.8 million. that former intern who was all grown up now says he didn't realize what he had, like who could. his father noticed that small label that red apollo 11, july 11th. he decided, i'll hang onto thes these. he heard nasa i was trying to track down those tapes decades later. the former intern joins us live. gary, good to see you. >> thank you. >> shepard: i heard there were so many reels you needed needed u-haul trucks. >> three trips and people don't realize how heavy that tape is.
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each one of these reels is about 12 pounds. >> shepard: you had 1100 of them. >> i had a good money. >> shepard: from my understanding and correct me if i'm wrong, they transferred all of this videotape over to film in the 1970s and the government decided we don't need these originals we will sell them. is that it? >> that is basically it. they converted them and that was going to be kind of the and all story and they didn't think the magnetic tape was going to hold up as well as it did. just through luck i ended up with that magnetic tape. >> shepard: i hear one night you and your ski buddy were having beers and he dropped some knowledge on you, what did he tell you? >> in 2008 we were in vail and he mentioned he had an odd project.
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people from the ski club, a lot of nasa engineers. he said he was looking for the lost videotapes and i asked him what are you talking about? he said it's been in the news, it seems we can't find the original nasa apollo 11 tapes. i told him, but i've got those. >> shepard: i know where those are. >> he chuckled and he said you're not serious are you? i said absolutely i am. i have three tapes and they are labeled apollo 11. as it turned out it wasn't exactly what they were looking for. they were looking for the slow scan tapes that were recorded in australia, but now these are pretty much the next best thing. >> shepard: $1.8 million. what will you do with that? >> somebody else asked me that
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question. my first thought, i was going to give 28% to my uncle. my uncle sam. after that, i have a grandson that is starting college and still get some help. >> shepard: that is mighty nice of you. congratulations. sometimes it pays to hoard stuff. >> this time it certainly did. >> shepard: gary george, the lucky intern. nice to meet you. thanks for coming by. the largest gathering of aviation fans taking off today in wisconsin in the business network jeff flock tested out some planes. there are few who do live shots quite like jeff locke does. i bet we are about to get a doozy. there he is. that is next. ♪ not again. limu that's your reflection.
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...when a plan stops being a plan and gets set into motion. today's merrill can help you get there with the people, tools, and personalized advice to help turn your ambitions into action. what would you like the power to do? >> shepard: think flames are cool? you bet to jump on a jet to
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oshkosh, wisconsin. world war ii bombers, fighter jets, and even homemade aircraft at the convention there. jeff flock, the very best to do such a story, he is live in oshkosh b'gosh. >> it's ach 47, chinook helicopter. casey 46, a strata tinker. i have to show you something. i'm not feeling well at the moment, and that's because i was on an acrobatic aircraft this morning. i've got to tell you. you don't want to do that if you've had a big breakfast. fortunately, they tell you, if you think you may lose that breakfast, and by the way, look straight up. see that? those are t-28 trainers. they are all flying in from
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various locations around the country to the biggest coming together of those kind of aircraft uses trainers as report -- after world war ii. the 70 year anniversary. if you're going to throw up, and i was on one of those t-28s this morning, they are also able to do acrobatics. they would train fighter pilots with it. they say if you're going to throw up, what you do is you put your shirt this way and you threw up down that way and you don't foul the cockpit. from the new york air guard, c-130 hercules transport. it's configured to land on ice, which we don't have any of it in wisconsin at the moment. you see the skids go down and you can land on a nice runway. everything is here. if you are aviation, you are here. >> shepard: or should be. speak unless you are 737 max or something. then you are not here. >> shepard: jeff flock, thanks
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so much, oshkosh, wisconsin. the final bell is ringing on wall street just a few blocks south of us and look at that. we are in the green again. "your world" with neil cavuto, the best in business. that begins now. >> we are ready for the absolute worst. we are very geared up. they are really the number one state of terror in the world. speak to the president says the u.s. is geared up for iran. why doesn't iran seem too concerned? does this look like a country bound by sanctions? the stunning video of iranian soldiers capturing a british flag tinker over the weekend, even as the british naval vessel deemed too far away to help is powerless to respond. inside that tanker, dazed grim crewmembers huddled under the watchful eyes of iranian